“You’d think being over there for a while you’d have figured your way over to the visiting side one time. No, not at all,” Guerra said. “I got so lost the first day I was here for like 15 minutes just circling the place.”

By Wednesday, the former Dodgers had figured out the lay of the land. Each had appeared in a game, too. Belisario got the save Tuesday, his first in 136 career appearances at Dodger Stadium.

Belisario was non-tendered by the Dodgers following the season and signed with the White Sox less than three weeks into his free agency. He became the closer May 20 when Matt Lindstrom injured his ankle.

It’s an opportunity he never was afforded during four seasons with the Dodgers. The 31-year-old didn’t deny there was an extra bit of motivation behind the 97-mph sinkers he threw to Yasiel Puig and Hanley Ramirez on Tuesday. According to BrooksBaseball.net, it was the fastest Belisario has thrown his sinker this year.

“Yeah. I felt excited because I was with them last year,” he said.

The extra motivation might have helped. So did a diet and workout regimen Belisario said helped him lose 15 pounds since the season began.

“I used to have a back problem sometimes when I was with a lot of weight,” Belisario said. “Now I don’t feel any pain.

“I feel really good, you know. It feels fine.”

Belisario said he made the Dodgers aware of his persistent back pain. Manager Don Mattingly said the team never implored Belisario to lose weight.

“I never really worried about his weight, honestly,” Mattingly said. “That wasn’t one of my concerns.”

Guerra signed a minor-league contract with the White Sox shortly after he was designated for assignment by the Dodgers in March. Monday’s relief appearance was his fourth since his contract was selected from Triple-A on May 20.

Guerra did get a chance to close with the Dodgers, in 2011 and 2012. Last year, he was back in the minors and starting at times. He’s pitched exclusively out of the bullpen with his new organization.

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“So far it’s been great,” he said. “It’s a new chapter of my life. I’m just blessed. This team took a chance on me. Every time they give me the ball I’m trying to earn a spot. It’s cool to come back to your old place and see everyone.”

Draft Dodgers

With pitchers tearing their ulnar collateral ligaments at seemingly younger ages every year, identifying future Tommy John surgery candidates has become a pressing concern for major-league draft coordinators.

That includes Logan White, the Dodgers’ vice president of amateur scouting. The same goes for his 29 fellow draft coordinators as baseball’s amateur draft begins with rounds 1 and 2 today, with 14 compensation picks in between.

“A term analytic people will use is ‘risk averse.’ I understand that,” White said. “It takes a little bit of confidence and courage to take pitchers. The thing you have to ask yourself is, it’s always about who the player is and who you’re going to select. If you’re dealing with Player ‘X,’ you might say, ‘He’s so good we’re going to take the risk.’ But if it’s somebody that might not be an elite pitcher, you might go with the position guys. Teams are going to take a look at that.”

The Dodgers hold the 22nd and 62nd picks in the draft. Rounds 3 through 10 are Friday and rounds 11 through 40 are Saturday. White characterized this year’s first round as diverse, with a mix of pitchers and position players from the college and high school ranks all high on the board.

White said he wouldn’t be surprised if some teams pass over talented pitchers because of perceived health risks. He thinks that could wind up benefiting the Dodgers long-term.

“Say you pay for the rehab and the Tommy John, we’ll take a look at doing that because I have a lot of faith and trust in our medical people,” he said.

Also ...

Mattingly said left fielder Carl Crawford was about 80-85 percent healthy in his recovery from a sprained left ankle that landed him on the disabled list May 28.

Mattingly couldn’t say for certain, but “we’re hoping he’ll be ready when he’s due to come off. I think it’s the last game of the Cincinnati series (June 12).”

Once that happens, what will happen to Matt Kemp?

Kemp, who is struggling with a career-low .243 batting average and has just four hits in his past 34 at-bats, has been spelling Crawford in left. It figures once Crawford is ready to play, Kemp will be the odd man out.